Latin literature
The literature of the Roman Republic and the Roman Empire written in the Latin language. The periods of Latin literature are conventionally divided into "Golden" Latin, or Golden Age, which covers approximately the period from the start of the first century BC up to the mid-first century AD, and Silver Latin, which covers the remainder of the Classical period. Anything after the mid-second century comes under the blanket description of "late" Latin literature, and tends to be studied for the light it sheds on the development of Latin into the Romance languages rather than for its literary merit (though there are exceptions, eg. Augustine of Hippo.)
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2 Golden Age 3 Silver Latin 4 Latin Literature in the Late Antique period 5 Mediæval and Christian Latin literature |
Early Latin literature
Poetry ComedyGolden Age
Poetry Prose HistoriographySilver Latin
Poetry Prose- Petronius : Satyricon
- Pliny the Elder : Natural History
- Quintilian
- Pliny the Younger
- Aulus Gellius
- Apuleius
Latin Literature in the Late Antique period
- Ammianus Marcellinus
- St Augustine of Hippo
- Ausonius
- Claudian
- Ambrosius Theodosius Macrobius
- Paulinus of Nola
- Sidonius Apollinaris
- Sulpicius
Severus
Mediæval and Christian Latin literature
- Abelard
- Aetheria
- Albertus Magnus
- St Thomas Aquinas : Pange Lingua : Summa Theologica
- The Archpoet
- Bede
- Carmina Burana
- Geoffrey of Monmouth
- Gildas
- Goliards
- Gregory of Tours
- Hiberno-Latin
- St Isidore of Seville : Etymologiæ
- St Jerome : Vulgate
- Peter of Blois
- Petrarch
- Thomas of Celæno : Dies Iræ
- Walter
of Châtillon


